[
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=zionist+terrorism+%2C+20th+century&btnG=Search]
Just the Facts! - [
http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-leaders-freedman.html]
- [
http://www.jfkmontreal.com/dedication_by_benjamin_freedman.htm]
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It is past time that the "president" insist that his
subordinates get the facts out about Iraq's terror connection.
{don't look at "Talmudia"}
by William Kristol
01/16/2006, Volume 011, Issue 17
| Respond to this article - [
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/006/566igaww.asp]
[
http://www.israelect.com/reference/Willie-Martin/was_index.html]
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IT'S CONVENTIONAL WISDOM. In fact, it's more than conventional
wisdom. It's an article of faith among the enlightened: There
was no connection, at least no significant connection, between
Saddam Hussein's regime and al Qaeda and other terrorist groups.
Senate minority leader Harry Reid put it this way: "There was
[sic] no terrorists in Iraq." His colleague, Carl Levin, member
of both the Armed Services Committee and the Intelligence
Committee, says Iraq's relationship with al Qaeda was
"nonexistent."
Senators Reid and Levin are Democrats, to be sure. But few
prominent Republicans have challenged these assertions. And the
Bush administration has been as quiet as a mouse--and just as
meek. So the conventional wisdom reigns.
We have long dissented from this conventional wisdom. We have
argued in these pages that the connections between Saddam and
terrorists were substantial and significant. Stephen
Hayes--among others--has reported over the past three years on
extensive evidence of terror ties to Saddam's regime. In our
judgment, the evidence for such ties has become more convincing,
not less, as more information has become available.
Can we ever really know the whole truth--or almost the whole
truth? Yes. How? Let us--all of us--read the mass of documents
captured after the fall of the Saddam regime. Stephen Hayes's
reporting, including his article in this issue, suggests to us
that these documents would confirm the argument for a terror
connection. But let everyone make up his own mind, based on his
own reading of the documents.
So: The U.S. government should release the documents. It should
authenticate
documents where possible, and then release them promptly, as
they are authenticated. Or, if that is too onerous a
process--and lots of time has already gone a-wasting--it should
simply release all the documents, perhaps with whatever is known
about their provenance and likely authenticity, and let news
organizations, experts, and others make their own judgments.
Aren't most of these documents classified? Actually, no. And why
should they be? After all, Saddam's regime is gone, all the
information is at least three years old--and where there are
still actionable items relating to individuals, that information
could of course be redacted. Perhaps a few documents could not
be released. But a great many could be.
In fact, some of these documents have already been the subject
of media reports:
(1) A 1992 internal Iraqi Intelligence memo lists Osama bin
Laden as an Iraqi Intelligence asset in "good contact" with the
Iraqi Intelligence section in Damascus. The Defense Intelligence
Agency told 60 Minutes the document is authentic.
(2) Another internal Iraqi Intelligence memo, this one from the
mid-1990s, reports that a Sudanese government official met with
Uday Hussein and the director of the Iraqi Intelligence Service
in 1994, in order to set up meetings between bin Laden and Iraqi
Intelligence in Sudan. According to the Iraqi document, bin
Laden was "approached by our side" after "presidential approval"
for the liaison was given. The former head of Iraqi Intelligence
Directorate 4 met with bin Laden on February 19, 1995. Bin Laden
requested that Iraq's state-run television network broadcast
anti-Saudi propaganda; the document states that the Iraqis
agreed to honor this request. The al Qaeda leader also proposed
"joint operations against foreign forces" in Saudi Arabia; there
is no Iraqi response provided in the documents. When bin Laden
left Sudan for Afghanistan in May 1996, the Iraqis sought "other
channels through which to handle the relationship, in light of
his current location." The IIS memo directs that "cooperation
between the two organizations should be allowed to develop
freely through discussion and agreement." Pentagon analysts told
the New York Times that the document appears authentic.
[derision- what one feels when looking at a "William Kristol"]